The CBC was the first to show that mirror feedback therapy can powerfully reduce chronic phantom limb pain. Since then, dozens of studies have demonstrated its efficacy in treating phantom limb pain, complex regional pain syndrome (see a recently-published review), unilateral neglect, and paralysis resulting from stroke.

New Scientist recently covered Dr. Ramachandran and CBC graduate student Chaipat Chunharas' research on calendar synesthesia, a neural phenomenon in which people vividly percieve months of the year laid out in visual space. Their findings were recently published in Neurocase.

Dr. Ramachandran and CBC ‎postbaccalaureate researcher Zeve Marcus discovered that synesthetes experience an exaggerated version of the McCollough Illusion. Their findings were recently published in i-Perception.

The Washington Post covered CBC graduate student Miren Edelstein's research on misophonia, a chronic condition in which typically innocuous sounds evoke anxiety or panic. Miren's findings were published in 2013 in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.